Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Welcome to the Jonathan and Kelly Show. He must remember,
we are not the crazy ones New York City, Kelly.
Speaker 2 (00:10):
They want us to think we are crazy. We are safe.
Speaker 1 (00:15):
Wait whenever you have to start off your address to
the PEP rally, as it were with we're not the
crazy ones.
Speaker 3 (00:23):
We're not crazy.
Speaker 2 (00:24):
We're not crazy New York.
Speaker 3 (00:25):
No, we're saying trust us, saying.
Speaker 1 (00:29):
Every same person knows you ought to have because we
have food deserts. We're talking about that later in the podcast.
Here in South Carolina, you're going to get free state
run grocery store food. They've already told you. We've taken
over all the apartments in New York. Just it's uh,
the government's just going to take over all those properties.
Speaker 3 (00:49):
And that's what socialism is.
Speaker 1 (00:51):
And for the for the tenants who are going to
be already tied in with their political connections and donations,
certainly we may allow them to have theties, but we
will set the rent control. So we got we got
your free free bus, we've got free transportation, yea free food,
free housing.
Speaker 2 (01:09):
Yes, Now, how are we going to do the clothing?
Speaker 1 (01:13):
Well, because you look at your expenses, there's always food
clothing and shelter transportation.
Speaker 3 (01:19):
And again, if you're all equal, I can't have somebody
wearing air Jordan's and somebody not.
Speaker 2 (01:23):
Wearing Air Jordan's great point.
Speaker 3 (01:25):
So we're going to have to minimalize that as well.
But you know, I think the amazing thing about the
Democrat Party is I was watching maybe it was Harry
Enton or one of those types of Polsters, and they
were talking about how just fifteen years ago when Barack
Obama became the president or whatever, maybe it's twenty ten,
is twenty two thousand and nine or something like that,
(01:48):
when they surveyed specifically Democrats, how do you feel about socialism?
It was thirty eight percent had a favorability of it.
Now it's up to sixty percent of Democrats. Yeah, they
liked the idea of socialism, which is I think a
result of their long term strategy which has been in
(02:11):
place for many decades now of taking over the school
systems and not teaching the reality of what socialism has done,
like what is socialism and how does it actually work?
Because at the beginning, you need a revolution of some kind.
Usually you need somebody to kind of overthrow the current
(02:32):
government in order to get you into a socialist state,
and the crowd is with you. They're very excited because
they're imagining. Usually it's a class warfare thing. In this instance,
it's not just class warfare. It's not just the rich
first the poor. Like in China, they couldn't do different races,
they couldn't do transgendered they didn't have them. Yet in
(02:56):
the early nineteen hundreds, they were like, no, we're going
to just be the rich versus the poor. The poor,
there's a lot more of us poor than there are rich.
Let's go get the rich, take their property from them,
divvy it up amongst ourselves. We can all live comfortably.
That was the plan for socialism. That's what births somebody
like Chairman Mao, and then Chairman Mao ends up killing
(03:17):
thirty forty fifty million Chinese, because those are the thirty
forty fifty million who said, oh ho wait, wait, wait wait,
I think we're going too far.
Speaker 2 (03:26):
You know.
Speaker 3 (03:26):
That's how that's how Stalin ends up inventing the gulags.
That's all these things happen when somebody dares to push
back against the new authoritarian.
Speaker 1 (03:36):
So you're saying that they weren't teaching that in the schools,
and in fact, they were making socialism more appealing through
their past thirty maybe longer, but at least thirty years
of indoctrination through the public education system.
Speaker 3 (03:50):
Yes, and so that's why the Democrats, and again most Democrats,
I'm not talking about the politicians per se, although I'm
sure a good percentage of them as well run, but
the the actual people who are voting Democrat, not the
lunatics you see on television at the protests and stuff.
I feel like most Democrats are people with big hearts.
That's why they call them the bleeding heart Liberals. They
(04:11):
just see a problem and they're like, can't we just
do something to help these people? Can't we just save
the environment. Can't we just lower prices? Can't we just
help the homeless? Can't we just do this, that and
the other thing? And they don't understand the complexities involved
in it.
Speaker 1 (04:29):
Not even elected officials. I heard Debbie Dinglesnitz this morning
on NBC excuse me, MS now.
Speaker 3 (04:37):
Is did it flip?
Speaker 2 (04:38):
Not yet?
Speaker 1 (04:38):
Oh, but they are starting to talk about it more. Okay,
they're recognizing what their new title is going to be.
MS thirteen. Now, anyway, she didn't go full socialist on you.
But she did talk about can't we just do what
the people want us to do? She didn't say American.
That's the first problem. Can't we just do what the
people want us to do? Can't Donald Trump, he claimed
(05:00):
to be the great negotiator. Can't he just come back
to the table so we can agree, so we can
move forward and make sure that the American people don't
do without their Snap programs. They're not going to go
without their wick.
Speaker 3 (05:11):
I did appreciate that some of the newscasts actually stopped
saying forty two million Americans rely on Snap and they
just switched it to forty two million people lion Snap,
because about twenty million of those are actual.
Speaker 1 (05:24):
Right, they don't need the word American anymore. They say people, yeah,
or they say residents.
Speaker 3 (05:28):
Well, some of them did continue to use Americans, which
is slips. Yeah, that's that that makes And do you
wonder even twenty million Americans, how is it possible that
twenty million Americans have fallen into a place where, again,
this is supposed to be a temporary safety net. Are
(05:49):
there twenty million people who are just temporarily for six
months or a year, just they just need a little
help to get out or has this become a lifestyle.
Speaker 1 (06:00):
Well we all know the answer to that. Unfortunately, now
when the lifestyle comes to an abrupt halt this Friday Saturday.
You've already seen the videos. I'm not sure we talked
about it on this podcast. They're coming to get the groceries.
Whether they got the wick on their card or not,
whether you got the EFT transferred reloaded on your snap
(06:20):
card or not, They're coming to get the grocery. They're
going to get their groceries.
Speaker 3 (06:24):
And I don't know if I mean they've read their
email clearly that says that the money runs out now
there's not gonna be.
Speaker 2 (06:32):
Any last deposit.
Speaker 3 (06:34):
Yeah, that's not coming. But I don't know that they
because I haven't heard a lot of them acknowledging the
email that said you need to work twenty hours a week.
I don't think that they're aware of that.
Speaker 2 (06:47):
I don't know they are.
Speaker 3 (06:48):
So when the snap payments are turned back on, uh huh,
but they don't get them because they didn't fill out
the paperwork proving that they work twenty hours a week,
then it's the that's when the far it is all
over the Shan.
Speaker 1 (07:02):
Yeah, it's gonna be interesting. And you watch what's happening
in New York. Well, it's gonna be interesting in New
York because they're gonna lose a lot of their upper echelon.
At least they will move, they will lose their residency
for more than six months out of the year. Although
I think in New York if you work one day
out of the year, they taxed that one day.
Speaker 3 (07:21):
They certainly do to NFL players.
Speaker 1 (07:23):
Yes, if you work a day in New York City,
you're gonna pay taxes, not just for that day, but
you're gonna pay taxes. And I've forgotten the way they
structured that. Of course it can be restructured. Bernie Sanders
will teach you how to do that. They don't need
Bernie Sanders's name. You got Mommy, Mommy, Mommy, Mommy, Donnie
from cradle to grave, he's your mommy.
Speaker 3 (07:44):
What a sad tale about his aunt?
Speaker 1 (07:46):
Oh gosh, I didn't realize the subway ran from New
York all the way to weir in Zia and Zia.
Speaker 2 (07:53):
Wow, I didn't realize that was.
Speaker 3 (07:54):
He was trying to make the case that his aunt
yesterday was one of the great victims of September eleventh.
Speaker 2 (08:00):
Oh, she was the height of the victimhood.
Speaker 3 (08:03):
Because she was afraid to wear hajib on the subway
because of the islamophobe that struck the city right after
the Islamists did what they did. They did that? How
did she say it? Some people things, Yeah, they did
those things in September eleventh, two thousand and one. And
the true victim again would be mom Donnie's aunt, who
(08:26):
could no longer ride the subway because.
Speaker 1 (08:28):
She didn't get beat up on the subway. She was
fearful of getting on the subway, yes, but she was
not harmed in any way, so she was not a victim.
Speaker 3 (08:36):
But when he made that speech, people said, well, wait
a minute, who's his aunt? And they just looked it up,
and turns out his aunt has never been in New
York City on either side of his mom or dad's side, nobody.
Speaker 2 (08:46):
She was too fearful to even come here.
Speaker 3 (08:48):
She was in Tanzania. And so then he said, well,
wait a second, who's the lady who's afraid to ride
the subway? And then he got very ticked off and
said the fact that Andrew Cuoma wants to even bring
this up, the fact that, no, she's not my aunt,
but she's in fact my father's third cousin. Yes, that's
but I called her aunt.
Speaker 1 (09:09):
The fact that Andrew Como would even want to bring
this up, when plainly the other night of the debate,
when I said, what would you say to those women
that you sexually harassed? Now, I didn't have to bring
that up, he would say it was my civic duty
to bring that up.
Speaker 3 (09:23):
Yes, but you know what, Listen, say what you will
about Mom, Donnie, and I know you and I are
both I don't I might go as far as saying,
I'm afraid of Mom Donnie, just because of the influence
that he's He's starting.
Speaker 1 (09:36):
To feel sad for people who will be victimized by him,
But I'm not afraid of him.
Speaker 3 (09:40):
Well, the reason I'm afraid of him is because socialism,
as we just talked about, is now up to a
sixty percent approval rating amongst the Democrats inside the Republican Party.
Allegedly it's up to ten percent now. Inside the general
United States of America, it's about thirty four percent today
that accept socialists him as a better form than capitalism.
(10:03):
And it's in our lifetimes I did not expect to
see this. You know, when when I was a kid
in the eighties and the seventies, it was like four
percent of Americans thought socialism was an acceptable opportunity. The
fact that thirty four percent now think that it's okay,
and mom, Donnie is apparently a charismatic figure. I don't
(10:24):
see it, but I understand the way people find that
he's charismatic. But what he's preaching is death. He is
he's offering you death, and people are.
Speaker 2 (10:34):
Accept miserable, painful death.
Speaker 3 (10:36):
Yes, he's bringing you death, and people want it apparently,
But he's what he's talking about are the issues that
a lot of politicians don't want to talk about. So
when he talks about affordability, he's correct. The vast majority
of New Yorkers can no longer afford to live in
New York. That's not a fake issue. That's a real issue.
(10:58):
That's not that's not a new That is an issue
that he says I have a solution for that's never
been tried, and a lot of New Yorkers are desperate
for something to save their city. If the if the
Republican Party, specifically Curtisilia in this instance, but to the
(11:19):
Republican Party, you know in general, and the Democrat Party
in general, where to offer actual solutions as to how
to get prices down, that would be a good thing.
You can't act as if it's not happening that the
number one issue is always my pocketbook, right, It's not
the nation's GDP, it's not Wall Street. Yes. And when
(11:45):
me has a problem and you, as a politician, say,
I understand it, Bill Clinton, bite your lip style, and
then you say, and here is the solution. I am
going to do this which will cause that to happen
unless you're willing to do some deep thinking and research
on that. That sounds good. You need somebody to counteract that,
(12:07):
and right now the Republicans are not counteracting it.
Speaker 1 (12:10):
You know, the other night when Mondamie was there and
also AOC and Bernie Sanders, the grandfather of all socialists
here in the US, they started chanting when when where
the governor was on stage, they started channing tax the rich,
and I was glad to see that they stopped. They
didn't follow the subtitles on AOC's dress from the Metro Gala,
(12:36):
Eat the Rich, which sounds something more like they would
chant because They really do remind me of a zombie community.
So eat the rich, I think is more appropriate. But
they were chanting tax the rich, and she made her
feel uncomfortable.
Speaker 2 (12:53):
She's one of the rich, so is Bartie. So was
do you know? It was AOC.
Speaker 3 (12:57):
It's funny that you say that, because you know, I
was reading a history book the other day and they
were talking about the French Revolution. When and when you
think about the French Revolution, if you think about it,
it ended when Napoleon recognized we got a bunch of
really dissatisfied frenchmen who want to kill anything and everything. Well,
(13:18):
rather than killing each other, I can if I could
figure out a way to get this group to go
and attack other countries, we could actually spread the French Empire.
Could we could make something of this? That's how they
basically ended the French Revolution. But the guy who was
like the the AOC of his day, the one who
is out in Paris talking about the rich are the evil,
(13:41):
corrupt ones. We should kill the rich and take their
money and spread it amongst ourselves. That guy is the
one who got it all started. Three short years later,
it was he who they came for, because by then
he was considered rich, so he ended up being executed
by the mob he started.
Speaker 1 (14:01):
It is kind of weird when you look at what's
gonna happen. Juxtappose these two because there's two separate stories
developing here. California pretty much has gutted their middle class.
So California as a state outside of the bread basket
of California, and I was wondering how much money you
had to pay me? I th they met this last night.
How much money would you have to pay me to
run knots Berry Farm. I'm saying a million under the table,
(14:25):
because you're probably gonna lose your life, but nonetheless, a
million under the table. I take that job tomorrow. Okay,
but you have to keep the bread basket going. Even
California recognizes that. But California is going to be like
Mexico City. Either your filthy rich or your dirt poor.
Either way, you're dirt is the common denominator there. There
(14:47):
is going to be no middle class now in New York,
they're going to run the rich out of town before
they eat them. So their tax base is going to
suffer dramatically, which is going to put them in a
position that you said you're right be afraid of him.
I'm not, thankfully, because George W. Bush is not the president,
nor is the Maverick the president, nor is H. W.
(15:09):
Bush the president. You're gonna and with Donald Trump and
then with Vance. Let's just say in it particular, when
New York starts all this crap where they're going to
advance the socialist agenda, you're going to find the federal
money getting harder and harder and harder for them to retrieve,
even out of their own pocketbook. So they're going to
(15:29):
be left to suffer amongst their own and they're gonna
make sure that they do allow Mondamie to run it
if he wins it, because they want them to suffer,
because this is going to have to be the microcosm
that the rest of the country will learn from by
watching this. Now in California, it's a whole different argument
going on with Gavenewsom.
Speaker 3 (15:47):
Well, there was an interesting update yesterday that I think
kind of flew under the radar in Portland, Oregon. Yesterday
they broke up the Antifa camp outside of the Ice
Portland Attention Center and according to the Mayor of Portland,
he says it all comes down to safety, ensuring the
community safety of all participants. We saw this really grow
(16:10):
to a point where there were arrests being made, there
was actual criminal activity, there were fights going on. We
really wanted to address it and try to limit it.
And so if you look at the video they break
up the camp, I don't see anybody really pushing back.
There's not like the Antifa members pretty much just all
went home.
Speaker 2 (16:27):
But they went down the street.
Speaker 3 (16:29):
I no, I think they went home.
Speaker 2 (16:31):
They went down the street to a safe house.
Speaker 3 (16:33):
Okay, Well, I'm going to give you my reason why
they went home. Okay, because of what we're seeing with
the government shut down, the funding has been shut off.
They were getting paid by the United States government in
order to be Antifa, and that has been back channeled
now and we can actually trace it to the NGOs. Specifically,
(16:53):
USAID paid roughly one hundred and eighty million dollars last
year to fund Antifa. The money has dried up. There's
nothing here for me. Now, why am I fighting a
war I'm not getting paid for.
Speaker 1 (17:05):
Well, the true Antifa, the committed Antifa, the religious Antifa,
went down and they set up.
Speaker 2 (17:11):
They took over some apartment building. But you're right the
other ones.
Speaker 1 (17:14):
Now, this is why Uncle Larry was in tears last
night on MSNBC. Now, he didn't want to take you
to Portland. He wanted to take you to Africa. And
I've forgotten where he was where they were in Africa.
He didn't go there. I'd be like Sally Struther showing
up with a baby Ruth talking about sending money to
the starving people. Anyway, So he was in tears last
(17:35):
night talking about what Donald Trump has done, As Bill
Gates said, the most powerful man in the world is
inflicting more pain on the most vulnerable people.
Speaker 2 (17:47):
Of what is he doing? So he cut off.
Speaker 1 (17:50):
USA to this feeding people in Africa. Oh, so he
wanted to take you there. He didn't want to take
you to Portland. Didn't want to take you to the
other cities where we're having all the funding that's being
done for the NGA and the NGOs themselves, and don't
even get me started on the Catholics and the Lutherans
and the Methodists and particular man these NGOs.
Speaker 2 (18:07):
But here we go.
Speaker 1 (18:08):
So Uncle Larry wants to go to Africa to tell you,
what he really wants you to do is make sure
we get the USA turnback on so we can watch
the interior of America and the enemy within. Actually get
a belly full and then get a magazine full.
Speaker 3 (18:21):
Yeah, those NGOs, I'm so happy they've been shut off.
The government shutdown has done wonders to continue to expose
how corrupt DC has been. We're very pressed for time
right now. We should mention the fact that today Jermaine Johnson,
that was our rash thought for today. Look, Jermaine Johnson,
the Richland County House member, is announcing allegedly that he's
(18:45):
going to be running to be the next governor of
South Carolina. He says he has a legitimate shot. He
thinks this particularly because he's black, that will give him
an advantage over the previous Democrat candidates because.
Speaker 1 (18:57):
He's on the white Karens that are going to come
out and tell you that you need to make sure
you plans your white guilt by making sure we put
people in power who don't have power.
Speaker 3 (19:07):
Yeah. He points out that if you look at the
previous Democrat nominees for governor, they have one thing in common.
They're all white men. That doesn't that is not representative
of South Carolina's Democrat party. I am, and he points
out that, you know, he had I think one brother
got killed doing something and other I think he's lost
(19:28):
both to one was in a car accident. I think
one was killed in a gun battle.
Speaker 2 (19:33):
He was raised in Los Angeles, was he yes?
Speaker 3 (19:35):
Oh, and he went to seven different high schools.
Speaker 2 (19:38):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (19:38):
Ended up playing basketball at college at Charleston. Yes, he
was a standout.
Speaker 3 (19:42):
Somehow ended up in Richmond County. And he says because
of that background, he understands South Carolina better than any
of these white candidates. And he doesn't even need a
lot of money. I mean, he's you know, he is
expecting to get a lot of money because the Democrats,
as you said on today's podcast, smell a lot of
blood in the water. They think that this is a
(20:03):
ripe opportunity. But they also thought the the thing about
Lindsey Graham. Lindsay Graham was pulling at about fifty two
percent last year, two years ago, and they spent all
that money and it was the biggest Senate race in history.
One hundred and thirty million dollars was raised by the
(20:23):
Democrat who did not move the needle, not even one
percentage point.
Speaker 1 (20:28):
And we could talk more about that as we see
that announcement coming out, and then the other big announcement
today is going to come from a Henrymaster. The fund
that we used typically for emergencies like hurricanes and the
like is going to be opened up to help the
food banks with our four shortfall coming for snap Wick
and those other associated programs. So that big announcement is
(20:48):
going to come down, and then we talk more about
it tomorrow